I saw that while eating lunch at Milestones on TSN. I voted yes, but I am more in the undecided category. I don't think he was Great, he was very very good, but Great is another thing. I assume he will end up there, just because the NHL seems to be searching madly for players that newer fans can recognize, so I think he will. Does he deserve it? I am really not sure.

Always loved Scott Stevens. One of the best pure hitters in the game ever in my opinion. A superb leader who showed up in the playoffs every year big time. He "always" made an impact. Brodeur is gonna face a few more shots now that both of his best defencement are gone. I say he gets in the hall of fame eventually as he doesn't have bad numbers, played more games than any NHL defencemen over his 22 year career, has 3 Stanley Cups, 13 time all star and played for Team Canada many times. Not a bad career at all.

mindbender wrote:Always loved Scott Stevens. One of the best pure hitters in the game ever in my opinion. A superb leader who showed up in the playoffs every year big time. He "always" made an impact. Brodeur is gonna face a few more shots now that both of his best defencement are gone. I say he gets in the hall of fame eventually as he doesn't have bad numbers, played more games than any NHL defencemen over his 22 year career, has 3 Stanley Cups, 13 time all star and played for Team Canada many times. Not a bad career at all.

Agreed. His NHL career stats back up your comments: 1867 GP, 1026 PTS, +358 (+/-), and thousands of solid hits to the opposition. He was the best Dman in the league for a decade! A fierce competitor who lead-by-example.

On a side note, in his 22 year NHL career, Stevens played in the playoffs every year except one. In the 1995-96 season, when there were only 26 teams, New Jersey just missed the playoffs with 86 pts ( 2 pts shy) and finished 9th in the Eastern Conference. Interestingly, their point total would have been good enough to put them in 4th in the Western Conference, six points more than the 5th place teams, and good enough for home ice advantage in Round 1 of the playoffs. I'm glad the eastern teams aren't dominating like they use to.

What's that sound?.... A huge sigh of relief from forwards across the league. His presence on the ice changed the way the opposition played the game, very few d-men do that. He's in the hall for sure but I would not be surprised to see him come back.